Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Koran ( Episode Two)
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all of those souls who recently advised me on a choice of edition of the Koran will be delighted to hear that I have received a copy, free, from a bunch of ( shall we say ) Muslim enthusiasts in New Street in Birmingham today while I was shopping. But why do you suppose their leader was so suspicious of my motives ?
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In an ideal world, you would wangle as many translations/editions as you can get your mitts on. Then, each time you encounter a contentious or repellant passage, you can look it up in the other versions to see if they concur or if certain translators are using sophistry to either harden or soften the message, the closer the edition is to the present day.
birdie, do you know of any document/book which goes through contradictions, particularly offensive (in modern terms) strictures and/or descriptions/acceptance of practice, etc., etc. quoting chapter and verse in the Koran and, for that matter, the Bible too - I would be really interested in something of that nature because I have never had the time or the patience to myself go through these scriptures.
We shouldn't be too surprised that believers are less than keen on objective scrutiny of the "holy word", after all we see direct equivalents in the secular world. So often people talk of the "best" in some way when they are comparing something they are committed to or otherwise identify with. Most people either seek security in the familiar or else align themselves with something they find believably "superior" in some way. Politicians and advertisers know this very well and heavily play on it: the former use fear induction as a means of gathering support and in a way advertisers do the same by using the discomfort they are able to induce within a large part of the population who want to feel pride in being up-to-date in all sorts of ways ("don't fall behind").
There are plenty of examples where people will suggest their country is the "best" in one way or other, even when that has no basis in fact because there are statistics and other information to prove the assertion wrong (I once pointed out one such claim being wildly erroneous, the person's retort being to in effect call me an annoying know-it-all). Wanting to be "best" on the moral/spiritual plane is important to lots of people and it is entirely understandable that religious believers are very touchy (and even illogical/irrational) when it comes to shaking the foundations of something which has (in most cases) been at the core of their identity as far back as they can remember. The most vulnerable are the ones who are the most dogmatic because their commitment is so often quite blind - maybe because in their clinging to this form of security they deliberately avoid questioning for fear of finding cracks in the pillars.
We shouldn't be too surprised that believers are less than keen on objective scrutiny of the "holy word", after all we see direct equivalents in the secular world. So often people talk of the "best" in some way when they are comparing something they are committed to or otherwise identify with. Most people either seek security in the familiar or else align themselves with something they find believably "superior" in some way. Politicians and advertisers know this very well and heavily play on it: the former use fear induction as a means of gathering support and in a way advertisers do the same by using the discomfort they are able to induce within a large part of the population who want to feel pride in being up-to-date in all sorts of ways ("don't fall behind").
There are plenty of examples where people will suggest their country is the "best" in one way or other, even when that has no basis in fact because there are statistics and other information to prove the assertion wrong (I once pointed out one such claim being wildly erroneous, the person's retort being to in effect call me an annoying know-it-all). Wanting to be "best" on the moral/spiritual plane is important to lots of people and it is entirely understandable that religious believers are very touchy (and even illogical/irrational) when it comes to shaking the foundations of something which has (in most cases) been at the core of their identity as far back as they can remember. The most vulnerable are the ones who are the most dogmatic because their commitment is so often quite blind - maybe because in their clinging to this form of security they deliberately avoid questioning for fear of finding cracks in the pillars.
The translation is by Zafar Ishaq Ansari, with a very odd-looking ISBN - 139780860374169 which you may or may not be able to find on any huge bookselling website. I have only reached page 66 so far, but I have been much struck by a few things - it seems to be entirely aimed at men - it declares that Islam is not a religion of compulsion, and it describes wives as "men's tilth". By that, I assume it means that women are merely the place where men sow their seed.
My motive for reading most of the non-fiction I read is to find things out.
Same here.
My motive for reading most of the non-fiction I read is to find things out.
Same here.
That's good to hear and try reading it. Try reading it with open mind. But you may still need further information about certain aspects. This is a good website.
http:// irf.net /index. html
http://
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I'm pleased that the many digressions (some mine) in Episode One didn't deflect you from your aim of reading the Koran, Atalanta. I think you should read the translation you've got and see what you make of the moral instruction it gives and what kind of society you think would result in today's world if we all lived according to its precepts.
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